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The Documentary Podcast

When Wagner came home

The Documentary Podcast

BBC

Documentary, Society & Culture

4.32.7K Ratings

🗓️ 10 August 2023

⏱️ 27 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Tens of thousands of Russian criminals – murders, rapists, robbers – were recruited from prisons by the mercenary group, Wagner, to fight in Ukraine. Now, after six months on the battlefield, the survivors have returned home, with official pardons. Many served only a fraction of their original sentences. And now, they're officially treated as heroes - protected by a new law which criminalises discreditation of anyone who fights on the Russian side in the war.

Already, some returnees are reported to have committed further serious crimes. One has confessed to the brutal axe-murder of his 85-year-old former landlady. In another case, an ex-convict believed to have served with Wagner has been charged with masterminding the killing of two children's entertainers, one of them a 19-year-old woman who was training to be a teacher. The murders in southern Russia provoked an outpouring of anger and grief, with thousands signing a petition demanding that the alleged ringleader - who denies any guilt - should get a life sentence if he is eventually convicted. But they know any punishment will probably be less severe, because the criminal records of former Wagner mercenaries have been wiped. They start their lives again from a clean slate, and if they re-offend, no previous convictions can be considered.

Reporter Arseny Sokolov talks to the mother of the murdered entertainer, to campaigners for prison reform - and to an ex-convict who fought for Wagner - to investigate what threat the returned mercenaries pose in their home towns and villages - and to assess the damage "legal nihilism" is doing to Russian society.

Producer: Tim Whewell Editor: Penny Murphy

(Image: A poster showing Wagner Group servicemen with a slogan reading “Join the winning team” in St. Petersburg, Russia, 24 June 2023. Credit: Anatoly Maltsev/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock)

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hi, I'm Hannah and I'm very excited to be hosting What in the World, a new daily podcast

0:06.2

from the BBC World Service, where we try to help you make sense of the world around you,

0:11.3

of the big things that are happening, the small things that are happening and everything

0:15.2

in between.

0:16.2

Search for What in the World, wherever you get your BBC podcasts and hit subscribe.

0:30.0

A village hall in southern Russia, a young woman in a crazily potent pink and blue jumpsuit

0:36.4

with waist-length brown hair is dancing with a group of excited children.

0:44.2

Organising parties and games for young people is 19-year-old Tatiana Mastika's first job

0:50.0

and she loves it.

0:53.3

But hours after one event like this back in April, Tatiana was murdered.

0:59.0

By a gang whose alleged ring leaders should have been safely behind bars, serving time

1:04.2

for another murder.

1:06.6

But he had been let out years early to fight in Ukraine, let out and pardoned.

1:16.5

You fight there and your conviction is quashed.

1:19.1

He was there six months, got a medal and his criminal record was wiped clean.

1:30.0

Thanks to this man, Evgeny Prigorzyn found out the mercenary company Wagner.

1:37.0

He taught prisons to recruit tens of sowns of convicted murderers, rapists and robbers.

1:45.4

They were used to kill Ukrainians in the bloodiest battles of the war and many of them lost

1:50.4

their lives too, but those who survived have now left Wagner and are walking the streets

1:55.9

of Russia again.

1:59.8

Amar Senya Sokolov and for assignment on the documentary from the BBC World Service,

2:04.4

am asking how Russians can feel safe with those convicts form Wagner mercenaries back home,

...

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